Enabling or Disabling Story
Karate Kid III
Vocab Part 1
P.O.V. & Vocab Part 2
Reading Strategies
100

What kind of Store do Mr. Miyagi and Daniel open? 

Mr. Miyagi and Daniel open a baby tree store.

100

RELATIONSHIP

How people or things are connected to each other.

100

WHAT PRONOUNS DO YOU USE IN 1ST PERSON AND 2ND PERSON POINTS OF VIEW?

1st Person: I, me, my, mine, we, us, our, ours 

2nd Person: you, your

100

ASK QUESTIONS

Ask about what you do not know. Look for clues in the text.

200

Who is Terry Silver?

Terry Silver is an old friend of Kreese's. 

200

AGONY

To be in great suffering.

200

WHAT PRONOUNS DO YOU USE IN 3RD PERSON POINTS OF VIEW?

he, she, it, they, them, theirs, (name)

200

Planning and Monitoring & Visualize

Planning & Monitoring: make predictions; read and reread.

Visualize: Create a picture in your head.

300

Who is Mike Barnes?

Terry Silver hires Mike Barnes to bully Daniel.

300

RESCUE

To save someone from harm.

300

AVOID

To stay away from.

300

Synthesize and Determine Importance

Synthesize:  Bring several ideas together to summarize. 

Determine Importance: Identify and summarize the most important ideas.

400

What does the mother wrongly enable her son to do?

She enables him to stay home to avoid a test.

400

What does Mike Barnes break in half?

Mike Barnes breaks in half Mr. Miyagi's valuable bonsai tree.

400

RESPONSIBILITY

Something that a person must do.

400

DEPENDENT

Something that you need and cannot function without.

400

Make connections

Connect what you read with what you have read and experienced

500

How does Janey wrongly enable her boyfriend? 

She never disagrees with him so that he will never have an asthma attack.

500

What does Terry Silver want to do to Daniel and Mr. Miyagi?

Terry Silver wants Daniel to fight Mike Barnes in the tournament and he wants to turn Daniel against Mr. Miyagi.

500

ENABLE

To help make something possible.

500

CONSEQUENCE

Something that happens as a result of an action.

500

Make Inferences

Use what you know to figure out what the author doesn’t say directly.